Oxfam America 2010 Annual Report

Page 1

Annual Report 2010


Working together to end poverty and injustice

ii


A letter from the president and board chair Once again this year, humanitarian emergencies on an unimaginable scale transfixed us. We witnessed nature wreak havoc on millions of the world’s most vulnerable communities. Homes and livelihoods were demolished by earthquakes or swept away by flood. Images of Haiti and Pakistan are still with us even as we view with disbelief the threefold catastrophe of earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear instability that is unfolding in Japan. While humbled by the scale of these events, we are proud of the role Oxfam staff and partners have played in saving lives, restoring livelihoods, and bringing the best that Oxfam can offer to these situations. We were there on your behalf—you our donors, our activists, and all who have supported us with generous gifts and passionate expressions of concern. We thank you for all you did to help those affected. Natural catastrophes illustrate the vulnerability of us all to the unforeseen event. Yet for the poorest people, uncertainty does not stem solely from natural disaster. The smallholder farmer—often a woman in Africa or Asia—lives on the brink. Market volatility can bankrupt her within weeks. Skyrocketing oil prices can put seed, fertilizers, and equipment out of her reach. Achieving a modicum of food security may be further threatened by land grabs, undisclosed corporate payments to governments, or demands for scarce water. Life at the margin is tough. Yet that farmer is powerful and resilient. Oxfam identifies the forces creating greatest uncertainty, and helps her and her community cope with these threats. As careful stewards of our donors’ money, we worked this year to increase the value we deliver to the communities we serve. We devoted considerable energy to working with our sister Oxfams to streamline operations. Through measurement and learning, and by knitting our confederation of affiliates tighter, we aim to achieve greater economies of scale, leveraging our power as a truly global NGO. We look forward to expanding Saving for Change—our community finance program that has reached more than 338,000 women in rural Mali. We can now take this program to scale elsewhere. We will build on our successful pilot of a unique microinsurance product for farmers in rural Ethiopia and will partner with the World Food Programme to launch similar pilots in three more countries. And we anticipate the launch of Oxfam’s food justice campaign later this year. On behalf of the courageous Oxfam staff in Haiti, Pakistan, and Darfur and the many others who work alongside partners around the world, we want to thank you. Thank you for your generosity and loyalty. Thank you for making the programs and responses we share in this annual report possible, and for enabling us to live our mission. With gratitude and regards,

Raymond C. Offenheiser President

Wendy R. Sherman Chair, board of directors


How we work

Oxfam 101

Saving lives. Developing programs to help people overcome poverty. Campaigning for social justice. We draw on these three approaches as individual situations demand. Taken together, they provide a comprehensive methodology to address the root causes of poverty and injustice. The fourth part of our work involves public education and outreach. Because to create lasting change, we also need to change how people think about poverty and its causes.

Vietnamese farmer Vo Thi Be, 33, holds fish she caught at her family pond in Hai Thu hamlet, Long Hoa commune, Chau Thanh district. Oxfam helps communities to learn more than how to fish. In this case, villagers learned how to raise fish in an environmentally sustainable way. Chau Doan / OnAsia.com for Oxfam America

2


Hard facts A decade ago, Oxfam America stepped back and examined several key facts about development work. First, most one-off aid projects—those created to deliver goods or respond to a symptom of poverty—have little lasting effect on people’s lives. Second, a combination of economic growth and access to markets is the primary reason that the percentage of people living in poverty dropped by 22 percent between 1990 and 2005. Yet rapid economic growth can create problems too; invariably, some categories of people—like women and girls or indigenous people— consistently fall behind others. These facts led us to deepen our institutional commitment to get at the root causes of poverty. It can be hard to distinguish between symptoms and root causes. We know we’re getting to root causes when we ask questions like, “Why are certain people systematically denied access to opportunities and capital that others have?” An old analogy—with a new twist—may help bring our thinking to life.

A fish tale Imagine a woman is hungry. So we give her a fish. She’s less hungry. This is the simplest definition of Oxfam’s humanitarian or emergency work: We save lives. We offer immediate access to lifesaving resources: water, shelter, and food. But, if we leave, that woman is hungry again. We’ve only dealt with a symptom. We all know the better approach, right? We teach the woman to fish. Now the woman can feed her family and teach others. But have we gotten to root causes? Doubtful. Men fish in her community. Why didn’t that woman have the necessary skills or knowledge already? Maybe we discover that fishing is taught in local schools but girls are excluded, and women cannot access the lake because fishing is considered “men’s work.” So, we help community members to change these social norms. This is how our work developing programs to help people overcome poverty begins. And this is where emergency aid often morphs into longer-term development. When Oxfam does humanitarian work, we do it by empowering affected people to organize and claim their rights. We recognize that the upheaval that crises bring can also provide opportunities for deeper change like, for example, the way men and women relate to each other.

Maybe. And that would be progress. But what if we still aren’t seeing a drop in poverty? We investigate. We may discover that fishing is the only source of income for community leaders to pay government taxes. We could find out that taxes are high because the government is paying down a loan used to build the dam that created the lake. And we might learn that the river is badly polluted and the fish are contaminated because of gold mining upstream.

Moving upstream Our story illustrates why development that targets symptoms rarely creates lasting change: let’s teach fishing, do gender awareness training, clean the water, fine the mining company. Each of these “development projects” is necessary—but insufficient. The real issue is long-standing social inequality. Certain people, often urban elite, have the means to control resources. These and other distant decision makers can act with relative impunity. The people affected are usually those in rural and poor communities—far from the corridors of power. So poverty and injustice in our hypothetical fishing village aren’t just “local”; they’re tied to the policies of distant governments and private sector actors. This is the idea of moving upstream. The goals of our long-term programs often overlap with our advocacy work because this is where campaigning for social justice often really begins.

Root causes The expression “root causes” refers to an interwoven system of relationships. Poverty is about power, and power is about how people relate to each other. Thus, providing goods or services—like food or training—can be counterproductive unless we also help people raise their voices and claim the right to hold their leaders accountable. This is how Oxfam works. When an emergency strikes, we address immediate and urgent needs of a community. If we become involved in longer-term efforts to reduce poverty in that community, our business model shifts. And, if we want to change people’s lives in a lasting way, then we work to understand both local conditions and what is happening upstream.

Imagine, after five years, women are permitted to fish. Have we reached the root causes yet?

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

3


Where we work

Oxfam’s global reach In 2010 | Around the world, Oxfam America prioritizes building organizations, fostering new ideas, and supporting initiatives in communities working their own way out of poverty. We do this through our regional offices on five continents, and through the Oxfam confederation: 15 organizations working together in more than 90 countries. In 2009–10, Oxfam’s total expenditures exceeded $842 million, spent on saving lives, developing programs to help people overcome poverty, and campaigning for social justice.

Oxfam America Other Oxfam affiliates No current Oxfam programs Oxfam America regional offices

Oxfam America offices

Oxfam affiliates (as of April 1, 2011)

Boston, MA

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

Oxfam America

Washington, DC

Dakar, Senegal

Oxfam Australia

Oxfam Great Britain

San Salvador, El Salvador

Khartoum, Sudan

Oxfam Belgium

Oxfam Hong Kong

Lima, Peru

Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Oxfam Canada

Oxfam India

Oxfam France

Intermón Oxfam (Spain)

Oxfam Germany

4

Oxfam Ireland

Oxfam Mexico Oxfam New Zealand Oxfam Novib (the Netherlands) Oxfam Québec


A new chapter | The Oxfam confederation that began in 1995 is embarking on a new chapter—prompted by a commitment to ensure that the $842 million that we spend annually has as much impact as possible. Each affiliate in the confederation has a rich history of working in multiple countries, so there are many countries in which more than one Oxfam is working. We recognize that bringing the efforts of all the affiliates in each country under a single strategy will increase our impact. It will also improve our cost-effectiveness and strengthen our identity. So in 2010, the confederation began this process.

Oxfam America’s investments by region* Africa and the Middle East

Latin America and the Caribbean

Total investment in region: $13.1 million

Total investment in region: $19.8 million

Top three investments (as percentages of total): 20.7% Sudan crisis 17.9% Other humanitarian response 12.7% Saving for Change

Top three investments (as percentages of total): 59.7% Haiti earthquake 6.3% Oil, gas, and mining 4.3% Indigenous communities

Countries where we funded work: Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Mozambique, Occupied Palestinian Territory, Senegal, South Africa, Sudan, Zimbabwe

Countries where we funded work: Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Peru

North America Asia and the Pacific

Total investment in region: $3.8 million

Total investment in region: $3.9 million

Top three investments (as percentages of total): 52.2% Decent Work program 44.9% Gulf Coast recovery 2.8% Other poverty reduction programs in the southeastern US

Top three investments (as percentages of total): 30.0% Humanitarian response 14.3% Agriculture and water management 9.7% Oil, gas, and mining Countries where we funded work: American Samoa, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Myanmar, Pakistan, Philippines, Vietnam

Countries where we funded work: US States where we funded work: Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina

* These numbers reflect our investment in saving lives and developing programs to help people overcome poverty. Because our advocacy spans regional, national, and international boundaries, it is difficult to represent our campaigning expenses geographically. Our US-focused public education and outreach investments are not reflected in these numbers.

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

5


Pakistan

Saving lives Less than two weeks into January 2010, the earthquake that struck Haiti triggered a disaster so massive it forced Oxfam America into overdrive, demanding expertise, speed, and enormous resources. Months of intense focus on the island nation followed, even as our humanitarian response team confronted new waves of displaced people driven from their homes by the ongoing conflict in Darfur. Throughout the summer and into the fall we also turned our attention to flooding in Senegal, Pakistan, and El Salvador. 2010 total investment in humanitarian relief: $21.1 million EXPENSE: Development and humanitarian relief programs

6


SUDAN

SENEGAL

SAVING LIVES IN 2010 Pakistan: Floods The unprecedented flooding that hit Pakistan in 2010 washed away more than 5 million acres of crops and damaged or destroyed more than 1.6 million homes. Oxfam America’s supporters gave generously to help Pakistan: $2.8 million. Although these monies were received too late in FY2010 to appear as expenditures, we began disbursing them in early FY2011 to support Oxfam’s response in Pakistan, which has helped almost 1.9 million people since July. 2010 Contributions to pakistan fund: $2.8 million

Sudan: Conflict in Darfur In 2010, armed violence intensified in Darfur, driving more than 250,000 additional people from their homes. Despite the challenges of providing aid in a conflict setting, Oxfam expanded operations this year, extending our water and hygiene programs to tens of thousands of people in the Kalma and Otash camps in South Darfur. With fuel-efficient stoves, seeds and plows, and small-business grants, Oxfam continues to assist families who are facing particular challenges. We are now working in seven camps and have reached more than 400,000 people overall. 2010 INVESTMENT in SUDAN humanitarian crisis: $2.7 million

OPPOSITE: Reshma, 10, and her extended family found shelter at a camp in Pakistan after flooding affected about 20 million people across the country. Oxfam provided water, sanitation services, and food, and helped people recover their means of earning a living. Timothy Allen / Oxfam ABOVE LEFT: In Darfur, where armed bandits and militias roam the countryside, women and girls who leave the safety of camps to gather firewood are vulnerable to assault. Oxfam is reducing the demand for wood by distributing thousands of fuel-efficient stoves—helping protect both women and the fragile environment of Darfur. Elizabeth Stevens / Oxfam America ABOVE RIGHT: Alpha Diallo, a public health officer working for one of Oxfam’s partners, surveys the flooding at a home in Pikine, Senegal. Standing water is a breeding ground for mosquitoes, which can spread malaria and dengue fever. So when floodwaters rose, Oxfam took action to prevent deadly outbreaks of disease. Myra Foster / Oxfam America

Senegal: Floods When heavy rains turned the low-lying city of Pikine, Senegal, into an urban lake, Oxfam set to work helping 30,000 residents affected by the severe flooding. We pumped water from homes and schools, provided emergency supplies, and distributed cash so people who had lost their belongings and means of supporting themselves could buy essentials. 2010 INVESTMENT in humanitarian relief in senegal: $252,000

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

7


Within days of the earthquake in Haiti, Oxfam launched a jobs program, hiring people to work on short-term projects that have long-term benefits—like rubble removal. With the income they earn, families can buy what they need, which has the added benefit of stimulating the local economy. Toby Adamson / Oxfam

8


saving lives

2010 spotlight

Haiti: Earthquake

total 2010 investment

Oxfam’s largest humanitarian effort in 2010 was our work in Haiti. The earthquake that struck near the capital of Port-au-Prince in January took the lives of 316,000 people, destroyed great swaths of the city, and left more than one million residents homeless.

Humanitarian response in Haiti: $12.4 million of $68 million Oxfam confederation response examples of investments through janUARY 12, 2011 • Provided more than 79 million gallons of chlorinated water monthly • Built more than 2,500 latrines and 1,000 bathing stalls • Distributed 12,850 tarps

Already severely overcrowded and struggling with widespread poverty, in 2010 Port-au-Prince became the site of one of the largest and most complex emergency responses Oxfam has ever undertaken. More than 1,000 camps—some small, others teeming with tens of thousands of survivors— cropped up across the steep hills and rubble-strewn neighborhoods. Our job, first, was to save lives by ensuring people had access to clean drinking water and decent sanitation services, both critical in preventing the spread of deadly waterborne diseases in crowded conditions. By the one-year mark, we had helped 500,000 people with a range of support, building, for example, more than 1,000 bathing stalls and 2,500 latrines. Our health promotion campaign, designed to educate and mobilize community members to protect public health, reached families across the city and beyond with important messages about their role in preventing the outbreak and spread of disease. As our fiscal year drew to a close, however, cholera hit north of the capital. We expanded our efforts and were successful in helping to prevent a widespread outbreak in the camps where we worked.

An emergency response is just the earliest stage in saving lives. Helping people rebuild those lives comes next. In Haiti, where unemployment has skyrocketed, Oxfam’s recovery efforts include finding ways to get people back to work so that they have the means to care for their families.

• Distributed more than 34,000 family and household kits

By October, we had hired tens of thousands of people in our cash-forwork programs, offering community members jobs that improved their neighborhoods while providing them with the means to buy the basic goods their families needed. We also invested in a host of small businesses so they could jump-start neighborhood reconstruction efforts. More than 1,400 tradespeople—plumbers, carpenters, and masons—benefitted from a program of cash grants and vouchers for tools.

how has oxfam changed lives in a lasting way?

• Distributed more than 47,000 mosquito nets • Reached more than 209,000 people with our livelihood and food security programs

We saved lives in Haiti. Emergency work, by its definition, cannot focus on lasting change; it is about immediate response. Our responsibility is to prevent loss of life and stop a downward cycle. So, first and foremost the measure of effectiveness is achieving some basic stability. That said, our humanitarian work is explicitly designed to set the stage for long-lasting change. We recognize that the upheaval that crises bring can also provide opportunities for deeper change. We will be able to measure our results—the lasting change in people’s lives—as our initial emergency response in Haiti matures into recovery work. We are only in the early stages of that process now. But, ultimately, we can claim success in terms of “lasting change” only when we can see changes in the underlying conditions that created the Haitian people’s vulnerability to the 2010 earthquake in the first place.

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

9


mali

Developing programs to help people overcome poverty Oxfam America helps people assert and defend their basic human rights so they can improve their lives. Access to these rights unlocks the potential to change the conditions that trap people in poverty. In 2010, we made 279 grants: investments in programs that will deliver impact. Among our biggest investments were in Saving for Change, agriculture and water management, efforts to ensure improved working conditions for farmworkers in the US, programs to increase the resilience of poor farmers (e.g., weather insurance), and programs to support climate change adaptation. 2010 total investment in development programs: $27.0 million EXPENSE: Development and humanitarian relief programs

10


ethiopia

programs to overcome poverty IN 2010 MALI: Saving for change Oxfam’s microfinance program Saving for Change continues to expand, led by phenomenal growth in Mali. The big news in 2010 is that the program is leveraging savings groups as platforms for social change by investing in agriculture and business and leadership training for women. Since the program launched in Mali in 2005, it has grown to 14,769 groups with 338,745 members who are saving nearly $5 million and are seeing a 39 percent return on their savings. Saving for Change is also working in Senegal, El Salvador, Cambodia, and Guatemala. Globally there are nearly half a million members in 21,000 groups who have saved more than $9 million cumulatively. 2010 INVESTMENT in saving for change in mali: $2.2 million

OPPOSITE: (From left to right) Fanta Niambaly and Fatou Doumbia are members of a Saving for Change group in Banakoro, Mali, that pooled resources to grow and store millet as a safeguard against food shortages. Rebecca Blackwell / Oxfam America ABOVE: In a warehouse in Shashemene, Ethiopia, workers prepare corn for storage as part of a program that helps local farmers find new markets for their harvests. Eva-Lotta Jansson / Oxfam America

ETHIOPIA: Food security When Ethiopian farmers pooled their resources and established a series of “grain banks” with the help of Oxfam and a local partner, their goal was to improve their lives. The banks would provide a reserve of grain for times of hunger, but also—if harvests were good—a place to store the surplus so farmers could get a better return by developing new markets. So, it was an exciting moment when, in 2010, the World Food Programme agreed to buy nearly 600 tons of corn at a competitive price from the farmers. Such profits can pave the way for rural communities to overcome poverty. In a 2010 government evaluation of 19 grain banks in Ethiopia’s West Arsi Zone, two banks funded by Oxfam were ranked first and second for their overall performance. 2010 INVESTMENT in agriculture and water in ethiopia: $863,900

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

11


A woman pans for gold near her home in Bambaraya, Senegal. Many farmers in this area—pushed off their lands by a large mine—are struggling to find other ways to make a living; artisanal mining like this is one of their only options. Rebecca Blackwell / Oxfam America

12


PROGRAMS TO OVERCOME POVERTY

2010 spotlight

West Africa: Oil, gas, and mining In 2009, ministers representing the 16 member states of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) adopted a directive to develop a code of principles and policies for mining in the region. Oxfam and our partners have been working to get the code adopted, and, in 2010, the governments of Senegal and Ghana both officially announced their support. Dianke Danfakha used to farm 29 acres of land in eastern Senegal where she grew groundnuts and other crops. Her family had worked this land for generations—through land tenure granted by the local chief. But, in 2007, the government gave the land to a Canadian company intending to mine it for gold. Because Danfakha—like many rural Africans—did not have a land title, she received no compensation. The land “was my only way to make money,” she says. Unaccustomed to idleness, Danfakha attended a training session run by Oxfam’s partner La Lumière, an environmental and human rights organization that is forming villagelevel groups to monitor problems related to mining. She is now an avid participant: “We learned in the training sessions how to protect the water, to protect our animals, and we learned about our rights, and we watch for rights violations,” Danfakha says.

Oxfam is funding similar village-level approaches to teaching people in West Africa (and Latin America and Asia) about the right of communities to free, prior, and informed consent when faced with new or expanded mining projects. This “right to know” has been a central goal of Oxfam’s oil, gas, and mining work. These local efforts are complemented by Oxfam’s successful international campaigning efforts in 2010 to ensure revenue transparency (see page 19 for more information). Three companies pumping oil 40 miles off Ghana’s coast will now need to disclose information about payments they are making to the Ghanaian government. This information will help a grassroots campaign in Ghana pressure the government to use the hundreds of millions in future oil revenues to fight poverty.

total 2010 investment Oil, gas, and mining in West Africa: $609,800 examples of investments • Funded three advisers in local activist groups to encourage Ghana to adopt revenue transparency law • Drove a 41,000-name petition to urge Ghana to adopt transparency law • Helped launch Ghana’s Civil Society Platform on Oil and Gas, which attracted 100 member organizations • Trained people in 10 communities to monitor the effects of mining how has oxfam changed lives in a lasting way? As we go to print, we are analyzing data from a study on gender in Ghana that evaluated changes in women’s lives between 2007 and today in three specific communities. Oxfam’s oil, gas, and mining work has had significant national and international wins. Yet, despite local examples to the contrary—like Danfakha —early results of our gender study show that in the communities where we work, economic opportunities for women have narrowed since 2007. We have good signs, however, that women’s leadership skills, ability to influence, and collective power are on the rise. What does this tell us about the local effectiveness of our oil, gas, and mining work? Only this: Policy changes take time to produce tangible improvements in women’s livelihoods, and we can now see that we need to invest more directly in such improvements to complement our policy work. After three years, we’ve made great strides but we cannot expect to see change at the community level quickly. It requires long-term commitment including more targeted investments in women. We will continue to monitor this work annually, adjusting our efforts and evaluating our effectiveness.

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

13


Farmers transplant clumps of traditionally grown rice in Cambodia. By contrast, the System of Rice Intensification teaches growers to plant seedlings individually and to select only the hardiest plants. This approach reduces the competition for light and nutrients, which produces stronger plants. Patrick Brown / Oxfam America

14


PROGRAMS TO OVERCOME POVERTY

2010 spotlight

Vietnam: System of Rice Intensification Oxfam’s efforts to bring together the right players to get both high-level and grassroots support for SRI are yielding significant successes—wins that signal the potential for dramatic expansion. In 2010, the government of Vietnam pledged funds to expand SRI in the coming year that will—for the first time— exceed Oxfam’s own investment in SRI. When Le Ngoc Thach became chairman of the rice growers’ cooperative in his village in Dai Nghia, Vietnam, his aim was “to help farmers get a better life.” He had heard about a different way to grow rice, the System of Rice Intensification (SRI), and he visited farmers using this low-cost approach who were reporting that it allowed them to produce hardier plants (i.e., more resistant to pests and diseases), save time and money, and grow more rice. “I saw with my own eyes the benefits of SRI,” he told a visitor in late 2010. So Thach sought help from the Plant Protection Department in Vietnam’s Agriculture and Rural Development Ministry, which, using a grant from Oxfam, was setting up farmer field schools to teach SRI in small communities. Oxfam had found a strong partner in the Plant Protection Department back in 2007; the ministry had an existent network in rural areas that could be used to set up and staff farmer field schools to teach SRI and foster learning and collaboration. For Oxfam, this partnership has proven a powerful way

of taking a great idea and scaling it up cost-effectively. For the government of Vietnam, the partnership has offered hope of helping millions of the country’s small-scale farmers decrease the cost of producing rice, which is both a staple crop for families and a major national export. But great ideas have to be tested. Le Ngoc Thach’s pragmatic farmers were skeptical. Chairman Thach had to guarantee local growers that if they were willing to use SRI, but failed to produce as much rice as they had in the past, he would pay them the difference—out of his own pocket. Thach’s money was safe. In 2010, he reported happily that he had yet to make a payment. Growers in Dai Nghia are now producing at least 10 percent more rice, using less fertilizer and virtually no pesticides, and enjoying a 25 to 35 percent reduction in production costs. By late 2010, there were 817,939 Vietnamese farmers using SRIgrowing techniques to cultivate more than 373,000 acres of rice. More than 54 percent of these farmers have been trained through Oxfam.

total 2010 investment Agriculture, water, and livelihoods in Vietnam: $164,900 examples of investments • Oxfam and local partners expanded SRI to 184 new villages in six provinces • Trained some 600 farmers through 18 farmer field schools • Secured government commitment to expand SRI in 2011: Vietnam pledged $383,000, which is more than twice its 2010 investment and exceeds Oxfam’s total SRI budget in Vietnam how has oxfam changed lives in a lasting way? There is significant evidence that lives are changing at the village level. Increases in family income can be reinvested in the farm, set aside to create a financial cushion, and used to buy food or pay school fees. At a macrolevel, we are also seeing quantifiable signs of change. Oxfam recognizes that an agricultural technique can only go so far unless it is used. Consequently, we have cultivated strategic partnerships with the government and in the private sector. Because the government will be the biggest player in agriculture in Vietnam for the foreseeable future, our success getting SRI embedded in the government’s work is a crucial win. Admittedly, we are not seeing wholesale buy-in; the government investment is still comparatively small. We aim to build momentum over the coming years. In Vietnam and Cambodia (where Oxfam has been funding SRI longer), we see promise in a new area of work launched in 2010: Farmer Led Agricultural Innovation for Resilience (FLAIR). Small-scale farmers need innovations like SRI that immediately benefit their lives, but Oxfam is “moving upstream.” So, FLAIR is aiming to reinvent extension services and the agricultural system to reflect the needs of small-scale farmers.

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

15


A Salvadoran girl decorates the wall of her primary school, the Centro Educativo Tacuba, which has been declared “a school free of gender violence.” René Figueroa / Oxfam America

16


PROGRAMS TO OVERCOME POVERTY

2010 spotlight

El Salvador: Preventing gender violence

total 2010 investment Gender violence prevention training in Central America: $702,900 examples of investments • Reached more than 31,000 students, nearly 1,000 teachers, and more than 6,000 parents with public education • Helped 40 public schools to establish violence prevention committees

In 2010, Oxfam America and our Salvadoran partners scored a major legislative win in the fight to prevent gender violence. The struggle to end violence against women continues to move forward in El Salvador, but the situation remains urgent. Between 2001 and 2006, murders of women more than doubled, and the number of murders has fluctuated between 337 and 437 per year since then, according to El Salvador’s medical examiner. This is a shocking statistic for a country of only 5.7 million. Oxfam is one of nine organizations driving the national Campaign to Prevent Gender Violence, which was launched in 2005. Since then the coalition has been educating key players in Salvadoran civil society and government about ways to prevent violence against women. Those trained include police officers, judges, teachers, health workers, and elected officials. In 2010, members of El Salvador’s National Assembly wrote and proposed legislation both to prevent gender violence and include tougher penalties for offenders. The result is the new Special Integral Law for a Life Free of Violence for Women—notable in that it expands the definition of violence against women beyond the home, to the public realm. In a major victory for human rights in El Salvador, the law was passed late in 2010.

The legislators who led the effort to reform national law were graduates of a course taught by the Campaign to Prevent Gender Violence. While legal reform is essential, the campaign also includes an ambitious outreach program to teach young people about their right to live free of violence. In 2010, for the first time, this creative program was funded by the Salvadoran Ministry of Education, enabling the program to reach more than 31,000 students, nearly 1,000 teachers, and more than 6,000 parents.

• E xpanded beyond El Salvador with violence prevention training for Maya women leaders, municipal officials, and students and teachers in 12 cities in Guatemala how has oxfam changed lives in a lasting way? Although there is no recent update in federal statistics on violence against women, a 2010 external evaluation lauded Oxfam’s gender violence prevention campaign as “an excellent example of a sustained, strategic … effort” that “has generated a change in policy and practice for individuals and institutions.” Areas for growth? Despite tremendous gains, we recognize the need to work harder to foster the capacity of municipalities to carry this work forward. From 2005 to 2007, it was hard to identify results; those years were devoted to understanding context and root causes. The payoff came in 2008–10: gender policies instituted in six municipalities, approval of a protocol for the Domestic Violence Law, and incorporation of antiviolence provisions in another law. These are tangible wins. Underpinning these are hidden ones: evidence that women are overcoming self-doubt; women, men, and officials are beginning to recognize objectification and feel responsible to take action; and women are expressing greater confidence in assuming leadership roles. Success begets success. Confident women learn more—want to learn more—and increase their capacity to create change.

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

17


CAMBODIA

Campaigning for social justice In 2010, Oxfam achieved a remarkable series of advocacy victories. Our Right to Know, Right to Decide campaign scored a major US legislative success, and a win in the field when the Guatemalan government agreed—in part owing to our efforts to elevate local voices—to suspend operations at the Marlin Mine. Our climate change campaign celebrated a critical international policy victory when the UN committed to establish a climate fund that will help developing countries to adapt. Our efforts to reform US foreign aid policy yielded a landmark policy directive from President Obama. 2010 total investment in policy AND advocacy: $7.4 million EXPENSE: Policy and advocacy

18


United states

CAMPAIGNING FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE IN 2010 GLOBAL: Right to Know, Right to Decide campaign In addition to a mine suspension in Guatemala and a Chevron shareholder resolution in Houston calling for transparent payment disclosure policy, Oxfam’s Right to Know, Right to Decide advocates achieved a dramatic legislative victory this year. Our supporters sent 32,000 emails to Congress calling for US transparency legislation, which resulted in an addition to the financial reform bill: a requirement that companies reporting to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) disclose monies they pay to host countries for extracting oil or minerals. This kind of transparency helps citizens in countries rich in natural resources (but where poverty is widespread) to monitor revenues and hold their leaders accountable for using a portion to reduce poverty. Next step? Oxfam is calling on the SEC to establish clear rules for implementation, and guidelines for enforcing implementation. 2010 INVESTMENT in oil, gas, and mining campaign globally: $576,800

United states: Reforming foreign aid Oxfam won a major victory in September when President Obama announced the US’s first-ever Presidential Policy Directive on Global Development. The US has long lacked a vision for fighting global poverty. The new policy provides the US government with a clear, compelling purpose and strategy for aid, and emphasizes that poor people themselves are the primary agents of change in fighting poverty. Three years ago, Oxfam helped create a coalition to reform US global poverty efforts and has been working steadily to increase support. In 2010, at our request, 55,000 Oxfam constituents called on the government to fix US development programs. President Obama’s new policy directive is the result. USAID Administrator Raj Shah cited Oxfam’s thinking as influential in the US government’s efforts to “align our work against serious country-owned and country-implemented plans.”

OPPOSITE: Chanthy Dam, director of the Highlander Association, passes excavation equipment near a mining site that was established in violation of Cambodia’s Land Law. The law is intended to protect the rights of indigenous people, but enforcement is poor and many communities are losing their lands to mines and other commercial activities. Patrick Brown / Oxfam America ABOVE: Oxfam campaigners speak to members of the public outside the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) Summit in New York in September 2010. Oxfam joined other organizations and campaigners at the Stand Up Against Poverty event at Lincoln Center and called for global leaders to recommit to meeting the eight MDGs by 2015. In addition, Oxfam called on President Obama to deliver the first-ever US global development strategy; by the end of the summit, he had. Jacob Silberberg / Oxfam America

2010 INVESTMENT in AID reform: $1.4 million Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

19


Juana Reyes, 67, grinds corn for tortillas. She and her family live in the state of Baja Verapaz, Guatemala, where a sustained drought in 2009 withered 80 percent of crops. In 2010, a tropical storm destroyed newly planted crops. Oxfam is helping indigenous Maya families—like Reyes’s— to cope with the challenges of erratic weather caused by climate change. James Rodriguez / Oxfam America

20


CAMPAIGNING FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE

2010 spotlight

Global: Roots of the food justice campaign

total 2010 investment Agriculture and climate change campaign globally: $1.9 million examples of investments • Organized 271 visits with members of Congress and/or their staff advocating for poor communities on the frontlines of climate change

In 2010, Oxfam built on its successes in its climate change work and flourishing Sisters on the Planet ambassador program to begin laying the groundwork for a new campaign focused on removing barriers facing food producers, particularly women. This year, Oxfam began weaving together our existing policy and advocacy work on agriculture, climate change, and gender into a new campaign effort focused on food justice in a resource-constrained world. In 2008, Oxfam advocated on behalf of farmers in the US and abroad to reform subsidies in the US Farm Bill. Then, in 2009, we turned our efforts to a legislative campaign aimed at getting carbon emissions reductions and strengthening poor communities living on the front lines of climate change through adaptation funds. To support this work, Oxfam mobilized 250 influential supporters— members of Congress, actors, and intellectuals—called Sisters on the Planet ambassadors. In late 2010, Oxfam helped win a UN commitment to an international fund.

Drawing on these efforts and our years working on the ground with farmers, we will formally launch our food justice campaign in the summer of 2011. The campaign team will urge governments and companies to make smarter investments in agriculture and climate change adaptation, particularly in programs and policies that empower farmers living in marginalized communities in the US and abroad. Investments must focus on women, who often fight a losing battle over resources and frequently go without so their families can eat. Programs and policies must enable poor communities to access the resources they need to farm. And they must help vulnerable communities build resilience to the unpredictable weather that jeopardizes their crops.

• Recruited and mobilized 250 Sisters on the Planet ambassadors how has oxfam changed lives in a lasting way? We don’t know yet. Were there gains? Yes. But despite our efforts, there is not yet any international adaptation money flowing into poor communities. In 2010, we cultivated powerful voices across the political spectrum to speak out about climate change. We mobilized environmentalists, women leaders, and members of the national security community. At the 2010 UN Climate Change Summit, we got language into the Climate Fund that will benefit the most vulnerable communities. Yet we still need monies committed to the fund. There was another significant gain. In 2010, an external evaluation of the climate campaign identified major progress, but also two weaknesses: intermediate objectives weren’t specific enough and the advocacy efforts in the US and other countries weren’t sufficiently linked. So—in laying the framework for our food justice campaign—Oxfam has set clearer milestones and an explicit goal to support campaigns in countries like Peru, Ethiopia, and Cambodia. “This campaign team has been absolutely courageous in taking a hard look at evaluation findings and acting on them,” says Gabrielle Watson, Oxfam’s senior adviser for campaign evaluation.

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

21


Board of Directors & Leadership Council (as of April 1, 2011)

Board of Directors Officers Wendy R. Sherman, Chair Vice chair, Albright Stonebridge Group Barry Gaberman, Vice chair Senior vice president, Ford Foundation (retired) Raymond C. Offenheiser President, Oxfam America Joe H. Hamilton, Treasurer & Secretary Executive vice president, Liberty International Other Directors

James Down Vice chairman, Mercer Management ­Consulting (retired) Jonathan A. Fox Professor, Latin American & Latino Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz Anne L. Garrels Journalist, National Public Radio (retired) Gina Glantz Senior adviser to the president, Seiu (retired)

Manish Bapna Executive vice president, World Resources Institute

Joe Loughrey President & chief operating officer, Cummins Inc. (retired)

Elizabeth Becker Journalist & author Fellow, German Marshall Fund

Shigeki Makino Chief investment officer, Global Core Equity, Putnam Investment Management (former)

L. David Brown Senior research fellow, Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations, Harvard University Rosalind Conway Director, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP David Doniger Policy director, Climate Center, Natural Resources Defense Council

Minh Chau Nguyen Country director, East Meets West Foundation Steven Reiss Partner, Weil, Gotshal & Manges Teya Ryan President, Georgia Public Broadcasting

Kitt Sawitsky Managing director, Goulston & Storrs Sarah Sewall Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, Harvard University Bridget Snell Organizational learning and knowledge manager, Oxfam America Roger Widmann Investment banker

Former Board Chairs Janet A. McKinley

2005–2010

Barbara Fiorito

2000–2005

Michael F. Macleod

1996–2000

J. Larry Brown

1988–1996

Marie Gadsden

1986–1988

Catherine E. C. Henn

1982–1986

Newell Flather

1979–1982

Robert C. Terry

1976–1979

John Thomas

1974–1976

Jayne Spain

1972–1974

Marion Clawson

1970–1972

Leadership Council

22

Mohamad Ali

Jody Forchheimer

George A. Miller

Marilyn Sarles

massachusetts

massachusetts

california

massachusetts

Karen Keating Ansara

Hannelore Grantham

Sam Miller

Peter Singer

massachusetts

massachusetts

vietnam

new york

David Barclay

Stephen Hays

Paul A. Moses

Renata Singer

california

new york

california

new york

Fran Bermanzohn

Barry Hershey

Peter Palmer

Lucian Snow

new york

massachusetts

massachusetts

massachusetts

Sylvia A. Brownrigg

Bart Hopkin

R. Price Peterson

Elizabeth Wachs

california

california

panama

new york

Terry Collins

Lisa Jorgenson

Ann Silver Pozen

Barbara Waugh

oregon

district of columbia

maryland

california

Ian S. Crowe

Stephen B. Land

Dana Quitslund

Kim Williams

connecticut

new york

washington

massachusetts

Bruce Detwiler

Peter Lynch

Kati Rader

new york

california

california

Barbara Fiorito

Janet A. McKinley

H. Jay Sarles

new york

california

massachusetts


Financial information (November 1, 2009, to October 31, 2010)

It was an exceptional year for Oxfam America. In 2010, we provided an unprecedented $62 million in support to our program services: a 20 percent increase over 2009. The generosity of our supporters made this possible; donations were up 63 percent. For the fourth consecutive year, our overall program support exceeded 79 percent of our total spending. Moreover, with increased contributions and careful management of expenses, we boosted our net assets by $8.3 million, assuring that we have the financial base to continue our efforts helping people to overcome poverty.

“”

We boosted our net assets by $8.3 million. … Oxfam America ended 2010 as a stronger, more effective organization. The $32.6 million growth in donations was due in large part to 2010’s unfortunate series of disasters: first the Haiti earthquake, followed by devastating floods in Pakistan, Senegal, and El Salvador; mudslides in Guatemala; and drought In Ethiopia. In total, we raised $34.5 million for humanitarian relief: $26.9 million for Haiti; $2.8 million for Pakistan; and $4.8 million for other emergencies. We must continue to grow our unrestricted base of donations in order to finance the long-term plans of Oxfam, so 5 percent more in unrestricted donations in 2010 was significant, as it brought us closer to the dollar level of unrestricted income we’d seen before the economic downturn. Greater resources enabled us to expand our work in key areas: development and humanitarian relief programs and policy and advocacy. Combined development and humanitarian relief program spending was up 22 percent ($8.7 million), mostly owing to work in Haiti and Sudan.

We increased our investment in campaigning for social justice as well. Policy and advocacy increased by 41 percent ($2.1 million) to allow us to expand our humanitarian advocacy efforts, engage with corporations regarding poverty reduction, and do spadework for the food justice campaign launching in 2011. Our public education expenditures were down slightly, thanks to cost-saving measures implemented in 2009. Our increases in donations and net assets—despite the still-uncertain economic environment—are a testament to our efforts to manage Oxfam more effectively while growing our donor base. We invested heavily to increase the number of our unrestricted donors, but still managed to reduce our expenditure per dollar contributed to 2007 levels (i.e., before the economic downturn). We held our level of administrative expenses at 6 percent, even while building the management and systems necessary to monitor our growth and assure the quality of our programming. In 2010, we continued our fiscally conservative policy regarding investment of our assets. Overall, Oxfam America ended 2010 as a stronger, more effective organization. We have the financial resources to support expanded program activity, as well as improved financial and management controls to ensure accountability. Our challenge is to continue to grow our financial resources so we can offer poor people worldwide the help they deserve in their efforts to overcome poverty.

Joe H. Hamilton Treasurer and secretary

How to read our financial statement Our four areas of work

corresponding expense category in our statement of activities (on page 24)

Saving lives Development and humanitarian relief programs Developing programs to help people overcome poverty Campaigning for social justice

Policy and advocacy

Public education and outreach

Public education

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

23


Statement of activities (Oxfam America and Oxfam America Advocacy Fund | Years ending October 31)

2010 2009

Revenue, gains, and other support Contributions Investment Income Other Total revenue gains and other support

$84,707,000 1,115,000 704,000

$52,070,000 1,115,000 371,000

$86,526,000

$53,556,000

$47,773,000 7,409,000 6,817,000 61,999,000

$39,121,000 5,263,000 7,086,000 51,470,000

5,034,000 11,165,000 16,199,000

4,034,000 9,154,000 13,188,000

$78,198,000

$64,658,000

255,000 7,922,000 151,000 8,328,000

2,208,000 (13,310,000) (11,102,000)

77,959,000

89,061,000

$86,287,000

$77,959,000

For Oxfam America’s audited financial statements and Form 990, please go to oxfamamerica.org/annual2010.

Expenses Program services Development and humanitarian relief programs Policy and advocacy Public education Total program services Support services Management and general Fund-raising Total support services Total expenses Change in net assets Change related to unrestricted funds Change related to temporarily restricted funds Change related to permanently restricted funds Total change in net assets Net assets at the beginning of the year Net assets at the end of the year

Statement of financial position (Oxfam America and Oxfam America Advocacy Fund | As of October 31)

2010 2009

Assets Cash Investments Pledges receivable Other assets Net fixed assets Total assets

$1,542,000 84,003,000 8,590,000 1,463,000 3,258,000

$3,157,000 70,109,000 11,884,000 2,806,000 2,174,000

$98,856,000

$90,130,000

Liabilities and net assets Liabilities Accounts payable and accrued expenses Grants payable Other liabilities Total liabilities

4,625,000 3,984,000 3,960,000 12,569,000

3,353,000 4,341,000 4,477,000 12,171,000

Net assets Unrestricted Temporarily restricted Permanently restricted Total net assets

36,490,000 48,078,000 1,719,000 86,287,000

36,235,000 40,156,000 1,568,000 77,959,000

$98,856,000

$90,130,000

Total liabilities and net assets

24

Financial information | Nov. 1, 2009–Oct. 31, 2010

Oxfam America is rated highly by a number of leading independent charity evaluators, including the American Institute of Philanthropy. In 2010, Oxfam America again received the Better Business Bureau’s highest rating for charitable organizations by meeting all 20 of its “Standards for Charity Accountability.”


Revenue growth (in millions US$)

Sources of funds

Individuals 54.7% $90 Foundations & Oxfams 34.6%

$86.9 million

Corporations 5.8% $80 Bequests & legacies 1.6% $70 Special events 1.6% $60 Interest & other 1.5% Foreign governments

0.3%

$50 $40 $27.3 million

$30 $20

Uses of funds

$10

$12.0 million $5.6 million

Program services 79.3% $7,000 0 Fund-raising 14.3% 1970 Management & general 6.4%

1980

1990

2000

2010

Annual expenses and investment in program services (in millions US$) $80 $70

Program services

Development & humanitarian relief programs 77.1%

Policy & advocacy 11.9%

Public education 11.0%

$60 $50

$40 $30 $20 $10

0

Development & humanitarian relief programs

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Investment in program services Investment in support services

Latin America & Caribbean 41.4% Africa & the Middle East 27.4%

Cross-regional programs

9.1%

Asia & the Pacific

8.3%

North America

8.0%

5.8%

Program management & evaluation

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

25


The many generous donors who support us year in and year out are crucial to our work saving lives, developing programs to help people overcome poverty, and campaigning for social justice. We owe a tremendous thanks to our friends listed on the following pages and to the tens of thousands we don’t have space to include here. We are particularly pleased to have earned the confidence of 96,246 new donors this year—many of whom reached out to us because of their commitment to help the Haitian people after the 2010 earthquake.

26


lifetime donors

Lifetime donors of $5,000,000+

Lifetime donors of $500,000–$999,999

Lifetime donors of $250,000–$499,999

Anonymous (1)

Anonymous (13)

Anonymous (20)

Stephen Hays and Valerie Hughes

Ford Foundation

Louis and Anne Abrons Foundation

ABN AMRO Bank

Benjamin and Francine Hiller

Edith Allen

Hunter-White Foundation

The Cameron and Jane Baird Foundation

Robert Amory

International Council of Shopping Centers, Inc.

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

The Harding Foundation

Reinier and Nancy Beeuwkes

The Anbinder Family Foundation

Hope for Haiti Now Fund

Mary Catherine Bunting

The Angell Foundation

Janet A. McKinley and George A. Miller

Clear Channel Outdoor

The Ansara Family Fund at the Boston Foundation Rebecca and Ben Baker

The McKnight Foundation

Lifetime donors of $1,000,000–$4,999,999

Ernst & Young LLP

Irene and Archie W. Berry Jr.

The Leo Model Foundation

Big Cat Foundation

Anonymous (9)

Barbara Fiorito and Michael Shimkin

Alice Claire S. Montgomery Trust

The Atlantic Philanthropies

Flora Family Foundation

The Bruderhof Communities

The Lloyd A. Fry Foundation

Howard G. Buffett Foundation Global Water Initiative

The Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment

The Capital Group Companies, Inc. The Coca-Cola Company Terry S. Collins

Patrick and Anna M. Cudahy Fund

William C. and Jean M. Graustein John and Kathryn Greenberg Rick M. Hayman

Blue Moon Fund Dr. Hamilton B. Brown James A. Buck Jane Carey Fay Chandler Mary Clark-Regamey The William J. Clinton Foundation

The Kresge Foundation Lawrence Leibowitz and Tara Greenway Jim and Anahita Lovelace

The Moriah Fund New Balance Athletic Shoe, Inc. Peter and Alison Palmer Pearson Charitable Foundation Michael and Josie A. Pometta Ann Silver Pozen and Richard Pozen, M.D.

International Union, UAW

Marjorie T. and William R. Coleman

Epic Records/Sony

JPMorgan Chase Foundation

Margaret A. Congleton

Goulston & Storrs

The Kopcho Family Foundation

Grousbeck Family Foundation

Levi Strauss Foundation

Crane Creek Family Fund of The Oregon Community Foundation

The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust

Frank and Alan Melville

Ian and Ruth Crowe

Stephen B. and Jane Land

Shared Earth Foundation

The Hershey Family Foundation

Charles Stewart Mott Foundation

Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation

The Shifting Foundation

The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

News Corporation Foundation

David D. Doniger and Lisa Jorgenson

Prudential Financial, Inc. QH International Thomas R. Robertson James and Anne Rothenberg John and Barbara Schubert

eBay Foundation

Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word

Public Welfare Foundation

The ELMA Philanthropies Services (US) Inc.

Shigeki and Kay Makino

John H. and Cynthia Lee Smet Foundation

Radiohead

Richard Ely and Lynette Tsiang

Laurie Michaels

David and Nancy Smith

Phillip T. Ragon

Energy Foundation

Neal L. Nix

Starbucks Coffee Company

The Schaffner Family Foundation

FJC, A Foundation of Philanthropic Funds

State Street Foundation, Inc.

Peter A. and Renata Singer

Bob and Pat Flynn

Michael E. Soloff and Sue L. Himmelrich

David Fraser and Jo Ann Alber

Not On Our Watch, Inc. Omidyar Fund of Peninsula Community Foundation The Rockefeller Foundation

E. Marianne Gabel and Donald Lateiner

Isidore Stern Foundation Swiss Reinsurance Company Toward Sustainability Foundation

The Sandy River Charitable Foundation

Jeanne Steig

Share Our Strength

Ward Family Foundation

The Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund

USA for Africa

Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP

Heather and Paul Haaga

Wallace Global Fund

Visa Inc.

Working Assets

Evelyn and Walter Haas Jr. Fund

Kim Williams and Trevor Miller

Otto Haas Charitable Trust #2

Youths’ Friends Association, Inc.

Tides Foundation

Walter and Elise Haas Fund

Edgar and Rosemary Villchur Ernest and Roswitha M. Winsor

Vernon and Lucy B. Wright

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

27


FY 2010 donors

FY 2010 donors of $500,000+

The Lloyd A. Fry Foundation

Anonymous (1)

The Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment

The Coca-Cola Company Ford Foundation Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust

The Hershey Family Foundation

Danish International Development Agency

$25,000–$49,999 Anonymous (15) Larry J. Adlerstein

Renna Draynel

Eugenie Allen and Jeremy Feigelson

Elizabeth S. and Paul Kingston Duffie

Susan W. Almy

Estate of Mark Eisner Jr.

Robert Amory

FAHU Foundation

The Ansara Family Fund at the Boston Foundation

Jacobson Family Foundation

FJC, A Foundation of Philanthropic Funds

Aziz Ansari

JM Legacy Fund

Bob and Pat Flynn

The Kopcho Family Foundation

Richard Gilder and Lois Chiles

The Kresge Foundation Stephen B. and Jane Land

John and Marcia Goldman Foundation

Levi Strauss Foundation

Estate of Arthur Gritz

Linked Foundation

Heather and Paul Haaga

The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

Harari Family Charitable Fund

$100,000–$499,999

Estate of Muriel McGlamery

Anonymous (11)

High Seas Foundation

Estate of Naomi Mercer

Louis and Anne Abrons Foundation

Intermón Oxfam (Spain)

Laurie Michaels

The Kaphan Foundation

Open Society Institute

Jim and Anahita Lovelace

Oxfam Novib (The Netherlands)

Shigeki and Kay Makino

Pearson Charitable Foundation

Estate of Alice McGrath

The Rockefeller Foundation

MetLife Foundation

Commonwealth Equity Services

The Schaffner Family Foundation

Lisa and Yaron Minsky-Primus

Compton Foundation, Inc.

Estate of H.J. and Marie Nersoyan

Margaret A. Congleton

The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Hope for Haiti Now Fund Janet A. McKinley and George A. Miller Oxfam Great Britain Oxfam Québec Radiohead Visa Inc.

American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. The Angell Foundation The Cameron and Jane Baird Foundation The Baupost Group, LLC Reinier and Nancy Beeuwkes Bohemian Foundation

Hurvis Charitable Foundation, Inc.

Silver Mountain Foundation for the Arts

Howard J. Buffett Foundation Global Water Initiative

John H. and Cynthia Lee Smet Foundation

Mary Catherine Bunting

State Street Foundation, Inc.

Calling All Crows

Swiss Reinsurance Company

The Capital Group Companies, Inc.

Paula and Mark Turrentine

Margaret A. Cargill Foundation The William J. Clinton Foundation

28

Stephen Hays and Valerie Hughes

DaimlerChrysler Corporation Fund

Kim Williams and Trevor Miller

The Harding Foundation

Bay Area Lawyers for Haiti Relief Fund Frances and Benjamin Benenson Foundation, Inc. Frances R. Bermanzohn Bridgeway Charitable Foundation The Peter and Carmen Lucia Buck Foundation, Inc. The Rev. Frederick and Mrs. Judith Buechner Marjorie T. and William R. Coleman

Estate of Vivian E. and Ross I. Conner

Oxfam New Zealand

Craigslist Charitable Fund

Ann Silver Pozen snd Richard Pozen, M.D.

Michele F. Demarest and John D. Patterson Jr.

Qualcomm, Inc.

Cathy M. Doyle-Heffernan and James G. Heffernan

Michael and Helen Schaffer Foundation

$50,000–$99,999

Peter A. and Renata Singer

Connect US Fund of the Tides Foundation

Anonymous (9)

David and Nancy Smith

Mohamad and Kecia Ali

Estate of Estelle Smucker

Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation

The Anbinder Family Foundation

Estate of Edith Tausner

The Development Marketplace

Estate of Franklin T. Chace

David D. Doniger and Lisa Jorgenson

Fay Chandler

The ELMA Philanthropies Services (US) Inc.

Terry S. Collins

Contributions received between Nov. 1, 2009–Oct. 31, 2010

David and Araceli Barclay

Oxfam Canada

Mary Sheridan

Charity Buzz

The Atlantic Philanthropies

Wallace Global Fund

Anne Marie Duffy and John O’Callaghan Eaglemere Foundation eBay Foundation Estate of Charlotta Evans Jason and Elizabeth Factor Flora Family Foundation Robert and Betty Forchheimer Foundation


FY 2010 donors

Anita and Robert Friedman

Estate of Betty Scherr Sacks

Marie Benedix

DBL Foundation

Estate of Melvin Friedman

Estate of Josephine Schrimpe

Dr. Robert A. Berenson

Mr. and Mrs. James Dean

E. Marianne Gabel and Donald Lateiner

Share Our Strength

Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation

The Sandy D’Elia Fund

William C. and Jean M. Graustein

Cherida Collins Smith

Matthew H. and Natalie Bond Bernstein

George W. Divine

The Shifting Foundation

Jeffrey Dennis

John and Kathryn Greenberg

Michael E. Soloff and Sue L. Himmelrich

Randolph Huebsch

Charles Spear Charitable Trust

Mark Berryman

Hunter-White Foundation

The Spector Fund at the Boston Foundation

Binnacle Family Foundation Estate of Charles Bittenbring

Dora Freedman Levit Fund For People

Hurlbut-Johnson Charitable Trusts

Dennis M. and Carol Berryman

Ron Doerge Marilyn N. Doerr Paul J. Donoghue

The Spurlino Foundation

Blum Family Foundation

Leif D. and Carol L. Jacobsen

Dorothy Lane Market, Inc.

Jeanne Steig

James Family Foundation

Irene Dowdy

Estate of Johannes Steinvoort

L. Bosworth and Kathrin Williams

Estate of Hilary Jones

Joyce and Larry Stupski

P. Brown and M. Hamburg

Annie Schubmehl Kane

Tides Foundation

Constance Broz

Nannerl O. and Robert O. Keohane

Tilly’s, Inc.

Bruce and Carol Bryant

David B. DuBard and Deirdre M. Giblin

Van Cleef & Arpels, Inc.

John T. Bullitt

Joel Edelstein

Weil, Gotshal & Manges, LLP

Eleanor S. Campbell

Epic Systems Corporation

Margaret and Matt Winkler

Sherman B. Carll

Todd Evans

Estate of David H. Winne

Catawamteak Fund of the Maine Community Foundation

Markus Finkemeier

John C. Cawley and Christine Marshall

Barbara Fiorito and Michael Shimkin

CCS Fund

First Church of Christ, Scientist

Center for Inquiry

Mary L. Fisher

Central Washington University Foundation

Renee B. Fisher Foundation, Inc.

Helen Chapell

Gere Foundation

Henry Chu

Estate of Nancy Gillis Global Entertainment Ticketing Good Fence Fund of Triangle Community Foundation

Kathryn and Andrew Kimball Estate of Paul Krause Emily H. Kunreuther Thomas A. Lehrer Lawrence Leibowitz and Tara Greenway

Julia Wise and Jeff Kaufman Working Assets

Ruth Lepson Richard N. Lewis

$10,000–$24,999

Don and Pamela G. Lichty

Anonymous (46)

Robert Lourie

21st Century ILGWU Heritage Fund

Lumina Foundation for Education Inc. John Madsen

Walter and Alice Abrams Family Fund

Jim and Donna Down DTS Charitable Foundation

The Felton Foundation

Foundation M

Katharine E. Merck

AHS Foundation

Clifton –The Country Inn

The Cynthia and George Mitchell Family Foundation

Alexander-Smith Academy

The Clipper Ship Foundation

Edith Allen

Steven F. Cohn

Alice Claire S. Montgomery Trust

Sally M. Anderson

Alva Greenberg

Estate of Yvonne Mozee

John M. Ankele

Virginia F. Coleman and Mervin M. Wilf Communication Automation Corporation

Nick and Marjorie Greville Janine and Josef Gugler

Joshua Greene

Gloria and John O’Farrell

Eric and Cindy Arbanovella

J. David Officer

Rick Ayre

Estate of Richard Oneto

Estate of C. Edwin Baker

Community Investments Fund of the Tides Foundation

Perkins Malo Hunter Foundation

Steven and Beth Bangert

Concept2, Inc.

Colleen and Robert D. Haas

Michael and Josie A. Pometta

Charles and Betty Barker

Margaret E. Haas

Steven A. Reiss and Mary Mattingly

Cindy L. Barber

Brian Cooper and Margueritte Murphy Corbis Corporation

Lenore Hale Joe and Luisa Hamilton

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Richard A. Barna and Eileen Maisel

Estate of Wilga Marie Rivers

Paula Baudoux

Crane Creek Family Fund of The Oregon Community Foundation

Bob and Donna Bearden

Ian and Ruth Crowe

Richard Beman

Adah R. Davis

Joan Doyle Griffith

Peter Haas Jr.

Nancy and Hendrik Hartog Eric R. Havian and Jean A. Jarvis

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

29


FY 2010 donors

Kevin and Beth Heerdt

Lew and Laura Leibowitz

New Prospect Foundation

Mark and Pat Heid

The Max and Anna Levinson Foundation

Charles J. and Anne E. Nugent

Miriam Hellinger Willis and Cindy Hesselroth

Allison R. Levy

Dr. Gilbert M. Nyamuswa

Joe Higdon and Ellen Sudow Fund of The Community Foundation for the National Capital Region

Lon D. and Nancy L. Lewis

OneFamily Foundation

Sarah Liron

Mark F. and Robin Opel

Joseph M. Lobozzo

The Orokawa Foundation

Lored Foundation Park L. Loughlin

Wayne Paglieri and Elizabeth Clarke

Joe and Deborah Loughrey

Peter and Alison Palmer

Wendy R. Sherman and Bruce Stokes

The Louis Berger Group, Inc.

P.A.N.I. Foundation, Inc.

Estate of Clara Shoemaker

Lowe-Marshall Trust

Janet Fitch Parker

Estate of Kent P. Shoemaker

Jess Lynn and Theresa Rebeck

Ravi & Naina Patel Foundation

Patricia J. S. Simpson

Stephen J. Lynton

The Sunil Paul and Michelle Odom Foundation

Elizabeth Skavish and Michael Rubenstein

Benjamin and Francine Hiller Michael Hirschorn Gary Hirschkron Mason Hirst Foundation, Inc. Nancy Hoagland Helen S. Horn and Anne S. Nash, Ed.D. Wentworth Hubbard

William & Jane Schloss Family Foundation Schreier Family Foundation Margaret Seely Semnani Family Foundation Robert and Gloria Sherman Family Foundation

Thomas M. and JaMel Perkins

Skyemar Foundation

Estate of Walter Hughes

Marquis George MacDonald Foundation

R. Price and Susan Peterson

Lee and Perry Smith Fund

Anne Humes

Pezeshki-Bryer Fund

Maine Community Foundation

Martin J. Spalding

Roy A. Hunt Foundation

Phil’s Foreign Car Service, Inc.

Jean Manas

Everett and Gladys Spector

Sara and David Hunt

Welling T. Pope

Richard K. and Harriet M. Squire

IBIS

Jonathan Mark and Donna Sakson

Estate of Jonathan Pressler

Starry Night Fund

Island Def Jam Music Group

Robert Matloff

Mary S. Prince

Stars For A Cause, Inc.

Jaquith Family Foundation

John Mcaleer

Project H

Eugene and Marilyn Stein

Peter Jennings Foundation

Bill and Joy McGinnis

John Purdon

Isidore Stern Foundation

Michael Kalagher

Christina S. Mednick

John Queralt

Jonathan Katz

Estate of Ella H. Medwin

Eric Reeves/Sudan Aid Fund

Antonia Stolper and Robert Fertik

Barbara Katzenberg and Peter Piela

Steven Merel

Reidler Foundation

James M. and Cathleen D. Stone

Margaret Renzi and John Sayles

P. R. Sundaresan

Kaufmann Foundation, Inc.

Hilaire J. and Judith Meuwissen

Rhymesayers Entertainment

Matthew and Camella R. Sutter

Avinash Kaza

William B. and Sandra B. Rogers

Richard F. Syron

Raejeanne Kier

Craig Meyer and Elizabeth B. Manning Meyer

Jean G. Roland

Tapulous, Inc.

Alexandra King

Mitchell’s Fish Market

Rolo Fund

Susan Kinzie

Estate of Sarah S. Moench

Rachel P. Knight

Randy and Norma Moore

Andra Rose and Joshua Goldstein

Caroline Blanton Thayer Charitable Trust

David Komar

William F. and Mary Sue Morrill

Ann V. Kramer

Darwin and Betty Hudson

Merge Records

Millie Thayer

Corey M. Rosen

Linnaeus Thomson Fund

Andrea P. and Gregory V. Moser

Bruce Rosenblum and Lori Laitman Rosenblum

Ticketmaster

Axel Kramer and Patricia Hallstein

Paul A. Moses and Barbara N. Lubash

Max Rosenfeld Foundation

Michael E. Tubbs

Shirley and Andreas Kramvis

Peter and Zibby Munson

Elizabeth Rosenthal

UNICEF

Jonathan Landau

Terri Murray

S.B. Foundation

University of Georgia

Estate of James H. Laubach Jr.

Robert A. and Mary O. Naftzger

Harold Salmanowitz

Steve and Chani Laufer

Robbie Nevil

University of Notre Dame, Third World Relief Fund

Sandra and Joseph Lee

Samuel C. Newbury and Janice L. Myers-Newbury

LeFort-Martin Fund

30

MacDonald Family Charitable Trust

Martha Nussbaum

Benjamin and Sophie Scher Charitable Foundation

Contributions received between Nov. 1, 2009–Oct. 31, 2010

Nathan and Shelly Sarkisian The Trudy Scammon Foundation

Toward Sustainability Foundation

van Beuren Charitable Foundation Elsie P. van Buren


FY 2010 donors

Paul E. and Betsy A. Von Kuster

Apollo Investment Corporation

Merle M. and Carl Brodsky

Drusie Davis

The Chris A. Wachenheim Foundation

Kii Arens

William H. and Ellen Brokaw

Roslyn Dayan

Tim and Sandy Armour

Lucy Avery Brooke

Ward Family Foundation

Jan L. Brown

Christine and Charles Warden

Patricia Artigas and Lucas Etchegaray

James A. Degel and Jeanne E. Berwick

Estate of Isadore Warshawsky

Artists Organization

Lynn Warshow

Asap Worldwide

Jack Webb Shirley F. and Douglas C. Webb

Dr. Patrick Brown and Dr. Sue Klapholz

Estate of Estelle A. DeLacy De’Longhi America, Inc.

Peter M. Ascoli

John Buck and Deborah Butterfield

Aspiriant, LLC

Buddhist Global Relief

Anthony M. Desiderio

Kim S. and Kathleen W. Wennesland

Warwick P. Atkins

Elisa Burns, M.D.

Mark di Suvero

Austin Foundation, Inc.

Dickler Family Foundation

Peter and Linda Werner

AVINA Foundation

Thomas Byrne Jr. and Margaret W. Byrne

Herbert West and Reverend Jan West

Dr. David and Meredith Babbott

Wes Callender and Patricia Davis

Mikelyn and Patrick Dooley

Edgar Bacares

Kenneth M. Cameron

Deane M. Dowart

Whitman Family Foundation

Gustavo Bamberger and Martha Van Haitsma

Robert Canape

Marcia and J.P. Dowd

Edward J. and Barbara A. Wilson

Peter C. Canellos

Martin J. Dreyfuss

Alison Bardrick

David Windmueller

Joyce E. Batchelder

Canyon Partners, LLC

Nikola Duravcevic and Dana Ben-Ari

Justin Wolfers and Betsey Stevenson

Estate of Florence E. Baxter

Jay Whipple Family Foundation

Worthy Causes, Inc. The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Douglas P. Wright

Bay Branch Foundation Bayless Charitable Fund of the Denver Foundation

Federico Capasso Michael and Gina Carter Ogden B. Carter Jr. and Elise T. Carter

Delaplaine Foundation, Inc. Edward DeNoble

Do Good Feel Good DC

Dr. Robert Durfee Walter and Ursula Eberspacher Philip and Deborah Edmundson

Estate of Robert P. Carter

Jennifer Edwards

Thomas and Carrie Carter

Andres Elberg

Timothy Carvell

Gregory Elias

Julia Bent, M.D.

Paulla and Richard Catmur

Elno Family Foundation

Best Yet Market, Inc.

Antonio Cediel

Robert Else

$5,000–$9,999

Brizio Biondi-Morra

Matt Cheney

Richard Ely and Lynette Tsiang

Anonymous (47)

Robin Black

Charles and Eugenia Chilton

Hamilton Emmons

Philip J. and Rachel E. Abercrombie

Mark and Deborah Blackman

Estate of Bruce Christensen

Howard M. Erichson

William Blair & Co. Foundation

Eric Chwang, M.D.

Paul Erlich

Cameron Blevins

Dennis E. Cichon

Blue Sky

Jay Civelli

Thomas S. Ewing and Marilyn London-Ewing

Lisa Boardman

Coheed and Cambria

Federation of American Women’s Club

Alan Bond

Jean Cohen

Fiduciary Charitable Foundation

Boston University

Jonathan L. Cohen Foundation

Raymond A. Firestone

Craig Bowen and Esther Diez

Steven D. Cohen and Elsie Stern

Jody M. Fleischer

Rizwan S. Ali

BR Response Fund

Foxtrot Touring Corp

Allinder-Anestis Family

Howard Branz and Carol Navsky

Consumer Attorneys Public Interest Foundation

Dr. Ann Alpern and John E. Laird

Gerald Breslauer

American Pubs, Inc.

Bridgemill Foundation

Carol and Howard Anderson Family Fund

Adean A. and Jim Bridges

Sue Anderson

Bridgewater Associates, Inc.

Amy S. Anthony

The Brimstone Fund

Miao D. Wu, M.D. Edwin Young Phil and Anne Zink

Adam J. and Deidre Abrons Adams Foundation Dr. S. James and Mary T. Adelstein James Alexander Susan H. Alexander and James F. Gammill Jr.

William and Debbie Becker Peter A. Benoliel and Willo Carey

Alexander J. Bridges

Convio Cares Grant Kevin Costello Bruce A. Craig Eleanor B. Crook Dada of Delray Beach, Inc. Abigail Davis

Bennett Freeman Benno Friedman Michelle and Richard Fulcher Thomas Fuller Funding Exchange L. Gage, M.D. Tracey and Tom Gardiner

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

31


FY 2010 donors

Earl and Mary Kay Gardner

John Hogan, M.D.

GBL Charitable Foundation Brian Geisel

Marcled Foundation

Thomas C. Hogan

Jack and Dorothy Kupferberg Family Foundation Brenda Kurlansik and Edward Walker

Jonathan Marshall

William Gerlach

John Horan, M.D., and Diane Singer

Judith Gibbons

Allen M. Howard

Barbara Kyse

Spencer Glendon and Lisa Tung

Guerard H. Howkins Jr. and Ann L. Howkins

Krishna and Shafeera La Borde Arthur Labow

Kevin McAnaney and Catherine R. McCabe

Edward W. Hoyt

Tracy Lamblin

Virginia S. McCallum

Michael R. and Jean V. Hoyt

Paul Lampert, M.D.

Rebecca F. Goodwyn

Joseph Huber

Landmark School

Eleanor McCleary-Sellstrom and A.D. Sellstrom

Stephen Gordon

Joseph V. Huntington

Alan B. Lans

David and Marcia McCracken

Patrick Gough

Iroquois

Anne T. Larin

Paul T. and Mary McKay

Goulston & Storrs

Judy Buckley Jacobs

Rebecka Renfro McSloy

Bradley J. Greenwald and Rachel C. Hoffman

Elliot S. Jaffe

Joseph M. Lazor and Denise J. Doyle

Ellen L. Grobman

Tatiana and Todd James

Amanda Gruss

Robert and Robin Johansen

Genevieve Guenther and Neal Cardwell

Matthew J. and Donna L. Johnson

GW Promotions Robert Hager

Jones Family Charitable Foundation

Alice Wick Hall

William Kable

Philip Lee

James and Karen Hall

Howard and Elizabeth Kahn

Thomas A. Lehrke

Mark L. and Shelley R. Hall

Geoffrey M. Kapler

Patricia B. and John C. Hall

Michael Kass and Kate Hartley

Anne Leone and Daniel T. Ludwig

Hamilton Family Foundation

Estate of Berenice Katzen-Cohen

Michael Goitein, Ph.D. Jackson & Irene Golden 1989 Charitable Trust

Michael Handelman Collier Hands Hanson Family Foundation Barbara Haroldson

William and Amy Jahn

Peter J. and Mary F. Katzenstein Grace Kelly Katrina Kelly

James D. Leblanc

Simy N. Mathov Peter Mayer and Robin Bierstedt

Ellen McVeigh and John Giudicessi D. Mead and Barbara August Walker

M.J. and Caral G. Lebworth Foundation

Merida Meridian, Inc.

Christopher Lee

Eileen and Peter Michael

Lou Lee

Lewis Family Fund Liberty Mutual Insurance Company John Little David Lochtie Raghu Loganathan

Mesa Electronics The Middlecott Foundation The Miller-Wehrle Family Foundation The Leo Model Foundation Bruce Montella B. Mooney The M.S. Grumbacher Foundation Jacqueline Muller Sharon Murphy

Stewart Logie

Donna T. Myers and Aaron J. Lebovitz

Sandra and John Long

Thomas Nagel

John and Cornelia Kittredge

Lorelei Foundation

Darcia Narvaez

Jeffrey Heil

Dave and Debbie Kladney

David Lowe

Nathan Associates, Inc.

Lonnie D. Henley and Sara Hanks

Paul S. Kleppner and Linda Mui

Helen Lowenstein

Aidan J. Neilan, M.D.

Dr. Annette J. Kopachik

Julia Ludmer-Duberman and Daniel Duberman

Mark Nelkin

Nancy and Thomas Lurie

Dr. Thomas B. Newman

Lorraine Lyman

Neal L. Nix

Don W. and Christine R. Harrell

Margaret H. and James E. Kelley Foundation

Joseph L. Harris

Michael A. and Dona Kemp

Headcount

Harry N. Herbert John R. and Shirley H. Hero Jeff F. Herring Alec Higgins George R. Hill Robert S. and Cynthia Honn Hillas Dorothy Hines

Dan Krejsa Irene Kress Carol H. and Robert D. Krinsky KRL Foundation Charles and Elka Kuhlman Harold and Estelle Kuhn Judith M. Kuhn Donald Kulas

32

Mark Leather and Catherine R. Galvin

Dorothy Marks

Contributions received between Nov. 1, 2009–Oct. 31, 2010

Robert B. and Jo Ann V. Lyon

Ursula and Lisa Neuburger

Wallace MacCaffrey

Cynthia Nixon and Christine Marinoni

Carrie and Michael Malcolm

Nomura America Foundation

James A. and Mary Parke Manning

Oak Lodge Foundation


FY 2010 donors

Oak Tree Philanthropic Foundation

Kenneth L. and Jean R. Robinson

David E. Simon and Lynn Gordon

Tower Family Fund, Inc.

James E. and Wilda Obey

Claire J. Rocco

Tufts Oxfam Cafe

Eric Oldfield

William and Sandra L. Rosenfeld

Thomas Sims and Elva Mendoza

William Olshan and Belinda Bellet

Robert Rosner

Sims/Maes Foundation, Inc.

James Turner and Dede Delaney

Stephen and Kathleen Rosson

Sisters of St. Dominic

Gene R. Ulrich

Vivian and Paul Olum Foundation

Marjorie Roswell

Murali and Gouri Sivarajan

Unitarian Universalist Society

Peter Roth

Ellin Smalley

Fredrick Vars

Emma Rothschild

Benjamin and Caitlin Smith

Anne and Mark Veldman

David Rothstein

Lucian Snow and Elizabeth Wilcox

Roger P. and Lusandra Vincent

The Omni Group Mary S. Orbe and Ernest N. Kaplan, M.D.

Estate of Richard C. Trexler

Anne Palumbo, D.O.

Julia K. Rowse

Martha M. and Robert Parke

Rural Action Fund

Julie Parsonnet

Anthony P. Sager

Margot Patterson

S.K. Saks

David and Laurie Pauker

Maria Elvira Salgar

Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth K. Pavlik

John and Virginia B. Sall

Sara Pearson-Moyers

Peter S. Sanborn

Louis and Lillian Peeler

John A. Santos

Alice N. Pell and Peter Schofield

William C. Spears and Robin MacIlroy

Robert Wechsler

Kitt and Heather Sawitsky

Marjie Persons, M.D.

John M. Sawyer Memorial Trust

John M. Spencer

David Wengert

Elizabeth I. Peters

Francesco Scattone

Tom and Elizabeth M. Sperr

Roger and Judith Widmann

Nicholas and Rita H. Petraglia

Robert and Alice Schloss

Anne Steele

Malcolm H. Wiener Foundation

Rodolfo Petschek

Edward Schmidt

Judi Stefflre

William B. Wiener Jr.

John G. Pitcairn Fund

Howard L. Schreier

Mary Stenger

Peggy Goldberg Pitt and Michael Pitt

Judith E. Schwartz

Frances Stevenson

Estate of Elizabeth Newman Wilds

James P. Scott

John Stively, M.D.

Christopher Wilkins

Mark S. Podrez

Dr. Ralph D. and Mrs. Roberta J. Scoville

Ivan Stokes

Christine Williams and Kenneth Frisof

Searle Family Trust

James Strait and Janina Levy

Dirk Pranke

Philip Sears

Straub Management

Robert Precious

Julie Seeley

Strauss Foundation

Marie and Tim Prentice

Paul Senft

Anne Stuntz and J.B. Swanson

Sally Quinn

Frederick Seykora

John Swift

Robert Quirk

Jamey Shachoy and Laura Ryan

Catherine Syrett

David Rademeyer

Marianne and Paul Shaeffer

Antoinette Tadolini

Chris Rauschenberg

William L. Shanks

Gordon R. Ray

Gordon A. and Mary H. Shaw

Tamarack Habilitation Technologies, Inc.

Raymond Family Foundation

Jamie Shaw

Shirley Dresner Tassoni

Yorkfield Presbyterian Church

Joan and George Rebeck

Robert Shaw

Gillian Teichert

Nathan Yost

Barry Reynolds

Noam Shendar

Alex C. Templeton

The Ritter Foundation, Inc.

Paul D. Shepherd

Mark and Amy Tercek

John L. and Adelaide W. Zabriskie

Charles Rizzo

Shoebuy.com, Inc.

Timothy N. Thornburn

Drucilla J. Roberts, M.D.

Winthrop A. Short

David Tichenor

Julie Roberts

Jerry Silbert

Yonina Tova

James R. and Margaret G. Power

Preeti Sodhi George Y. Sodowick Linda and Steve Sogge John G. Sommer Adam Sonfield Katherine Sparrow and Donald Tyson Jr.

Arnold Stoper

Ante Vucic Anne Wade and Gil Hagan Philip Wade Jonathan L. Walker Willie Wallace John Weatherley Alisa and Bruce Weber David Wendler

James Williams Marc Williams Mitchell and Lynn Wilson Stephen Winiarski Winky Foundation Judith Wofsy, M.D. Peter and Mary Wright Robin Wright and Ian Reeves Ying Family Foundation

Chris Zambelis

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

33


FY 2010 donors

Oxfam Legacy Circle

Daniel Butler

Nan Elmer

Members of the Legacy Circle ensure the continuation of Oxfam’s work by naming Oxfam as a beneficiary in their wills, retirement plans, and life insurance policies, or by planning a life-income gift.

Grace W. Buzaljko

Judy Hughes Fair-Spaulding

Edward S. and Mary W. Herman

Mary Lou Callahan

Evelyn B. Feltner

Ruth Highberger

Isabel McNeill Carley

Margaret Ferguson

Stephanie A. Chalmers, DVM

Elizabeth J. Finch

Marquita K. Hill and John C. Hassler

Shannon H. Chamberlin Diane Lewis Chaney

Barbara Fiorito and Michael Shimkin

Eunice Charles

Ian Firth

Ruth F. Hooke

Heather Chisholm-Chait

Linda Fisher

Mary Barnard Horne

Howard Christofersen

Susan H. Fleming

Marjorie Howard-Jones

Ella M. Forsyth

E. Rae Hudspeth, M.D.

Eric Hall Anderson

Susan Clare and Peter D. Parker

Jean J. Fox

Janet B. Humphrey

Margaret L. Anderson

Judith P. Clarke

David Fraser and Jo Ann Alber

Robert J. Hutcheson, Ph.D.

Hope and Arnold Asrelsky

Deborah L. Clayton

Gloria Gallingane

David J. and Arlene F. Iacono

Elizabeth Atkins

Corinne Coen, M.D.

Mary Edda Gamson

Marjean Ingalls

Lyndon and Betty Babcock

Prof. Farok J. Contractor

Earl and Mary Kay Gardner

James H. Julien

George and Harriet Baldwin

Barbara Cook

Elizabeth Garst

Sylvia Juran

Richard and Marian Baldy

Margery Cornwell

Jerome and Maria Gauthier

Ruth Gannett Kahn

Stephanie Barko

Dorothy P. Craig

Lawrence H. Geller

Ken Kaiserman

Dick and Gretchen Barsness

Lee Cranberg, M.D.

David E. and Liza Gerber

Anil Kapur

Alice Benson and Kirk Fitch

E.R. Crego

Mary A. “Kit” Glover, M.D.

Mary Karren

Lorna Bentley

David E. and Theresa L. Crowl

Anne C. Godfrey

Ronald Kastner, M.D.

Kurt and Catherine Bergel

John and Geraldine Cusenza

David and Irma Goldknopf

Evan Kavanagh

Sanford Berman

Barbara Dallis

Merrill Goldwyn

Karen J. Keefer Fund

Jeff and Ann Berner

Judith Dalton

Fred M. Grafton

Dorothy Kelleher

Lucille E. Bernier

Nita Daluiso Vincent Daly

Andrew H. Grange and Maureen Murphy

Sirid-Aimée Kellermann

Judi Berzon Mary Frances Best

Anonymous (383) Helen Ackerson Scott C. Alden Mark and Michele Aldrich

Mack P. and Margaret H. Holt

John R. and Ruth M. Kelly

John and Louise C. Daniels

Lucretia W. Grindle

Chelsea Kesselheim

David Blot

Denise D’Anne

Edward D. and Brita B. Grover

Clare Kirby

Mike and Cathy Blumenfeld

Posie and David Dauphiné

Jana Gunnell

David L. and Marilyn M. Kirk

Dorothy Bobolin

Ann Bemis Day

Donna Gushen

John Koehler

Marjorie Boetter

Patricia A. and William D. Dean

Hope Rogers Haff

Emma Jayne Kretlow

Surya Bolom

Kristina L. Dendinger

M. Kay Kribs

Daniel Bradford

Joan C. Denkler

John B. Haney, M.D., and Diane D. Haney John D. and Barbara Harcketts

Cliff Landesman

John and Ethel Hardy

Virginia C. Larsen

Richard and Lonna Harkrader

Nancy Latner

Mary Ann Harman

Miriam Ledyard-Brown

Peter Hawxhurst

Frances J. Lee-Vandell

Heartwind

Judith M. Leggett

Phil C. Branch Frieda Brock Heather Brodhead Richard Bulinski

Sue Dennis Carolyn M. Derr Sadie Dietz Anthony J. Distefano

Stephanie and Peter Kurzina

Frederick P. and Alice E. Bunnell

James A. Douglas and Alexandra Harmon

Charles and Marion Burger

Jim and Donna Down

Randy B. Hecht

Ruth Lepson

John and Susan Burns

Renna Draynel

Mary Alice Keating Heiger

Jean Lister

Kenneth H. Burrows

Lionel Duisit

June E. Heilman

Judith M. Lorimer

Ned Eldredge

Charles Nichols Henderson

Jane W. Lusk

Wallace F. and Therese T. Burton

34

Lisa Hoffmeyer

Contributions received between Nov. 1, 2009–Oct. 31, 2010

Nancy Henley


FY 2010 donors

Jessie Lynn and Wendy Withrow

Leonard Pellettiri

Deborah Sodt

James W. and Margaret H. Perkins

Wendy Power Spielmann

Frank and Barbara Pespisa

M.J. Maccardini

Arnold Sprague

John W. Pfeiffer

Michael F. MacLeod

Karin Stanley

Mike and Katie Place

Patricia L. Mall

James Stauffer

Pearl Porterfield

Joann Martin

Jeanne Steig

Jean D. Maryborn

Garry J. Prowe and Jessica A. Whitmore-First

Jean Stoenner

Sandra and David Matteson

Joan Quick

Don Mayer

Rob Quick

Jean M. McCarroll

Todd Quinto and Judith Larsen

Fred David and Barbara Kell Strudell

Mark D. McClees

Eloise Rand

Gaby Stuart

Sarah McCoy

Joan and George Rebeck

Jeannie McCready

Nancy Ridgeway

J. Mayone Stycos and Maria Nowakowska Stycos

Sheila McIvor

Barbara Rimbach

Patricia Sullivan

Janet A. McKinley and George A. Miller

Tamar J. Rivers

Marcia A. Summers

Carol Roberts

Lee E. and Claudia J. Taylor

James C. and Roberta McLaughlin

F. David and Helen E. Roberts

Char Kalsow Thompson

Thomas R. Robertson

Patricia Manion Thompson

Ed Robichaud Peggy Robinson

William R. and Patricia Thompson

Christina and David Romer

Christine Tisdale

Erwin Rose

Angelo Tomedi, M.D., and Margaret M. Wolak

Kathleen Lynn and Ben J. Nathanson

Betsy and Tom Melvin B. Meshke Bruce and Mary Metcalf Emily Meyer Ellen E. Miller Jean L. Miller Rebecca A. Mills Riaz and Lily Moledina Susan Mondon Jean Muirhead Donna B. Mummery Peter and Zibby Munson Francis T. and Alice A. Murray Leila Mustachi John and Darlyne Neff Neal L. Nix Gary Noguera Tamaki Ogata Sara S. Osborne John Osner Margaret M. O’Toole Kathleen Walsh Packard Patricia N. Page Edith L. Palazzo

Paul L. and Marion J. Ross Lisa Sawyer Louise Schmid Rose R. Schmidt Joan Schmitz Betty Scholten Susan Schrenzel Charles Schroeder

Vergie G. Spiker

Sidney N. and Marcia M. Stone Lee and Byron Stookey

Tod and Lori Turle Donald D. Wacks Lex Wadelski Donna J. Wainwright Mary G. Waldo Bettine and Lawrence Wallin Barbara Joy Walsh

James P. Scott

Carolyn A. Webb and David G. Bortz

Marian and William Sengel

Robert L. Weissman

Marian Shaw

Jean Werts

Patricia Sheely

Alice Reuben Weston

Elbis A. Shoales, M.D.

Michael and Judy White

Paul A. Shurin, M.D.

Morton D. Winsberg

Carol Sicherman

Mary H. Winslow

Jerry Silbert

William M. Wippold

Joan A. Sivadon

Arthur Wortman

Christine Sleeter

The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Douglas P. Wright

Gerry Sligar

Margaret P. Parker

The Rev. Margaret Treadway Sloan

Charleen A. Young

Jewel Payne

Linda L. and Jackson Smith

Dewey K. Ziegler, M.D.

Perry Pedersen

Julie Zale

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

35


Working together to end poverty and injustice Forty percent of the people on our planet—more than 2.5 billion—now live in poverty, struggling to survive on less than $2 a day. Oxfam America is an international relief and development organization working to change that. Together with individuals and local groups in more than 90 countries, Oxfam saves lives, helps people overcome poverty, and fights for social justice. To join our efforts or learn more, go to oxfamamerica.org.

Many people sought shelter with family and friends in the countryside when a massive earthquake leveled great swaths of Haiti’s capital in January 2010. One family, the Perards of St. Michele de l’Attalaye, took 17 guests into their home. A total of 26 people crowded into the small rooms, spilling for play into the walled courtyard. Ami Vitale / Oxfam America

36


How to reach us NORTH AMERICA US: Oxfam America headquarters 226 Causeway Street, 5th Floor Boston, MA 02114-2206 info@oxfamamerica.org (800) 77-OXFAM US: Policy and advocacy office 1100 15th Street, NW, Suite 600 Washington, DC 20005 (202) 496-1180 AFRICA Senegal Immeuble sis Lot. 171 Rue MZ 210 Fenêtre Mermoz BP 7200, Dakar, Senegal (011) 221 33 869-0299 Ethiopia DH Tower Bole Road Bole Sub City, Kebele 01 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (011) 251 11 662-4281 Sudan Building 17, Street 47 Amarat, Khartoum, Sudan (011) 249 18 357-3116

How to help ASIA Cambodia 2nd–3rd Floor #54, Street 108 Wat Phnom, Daun Penh Phnom Penh, Cambodia (011) 855 232-10357 LATIN AMERICA El Salvador 7A Calle Poniente Bis #5262 Colonia Escalón San Salvador, El Salvador (011) 503 2202-9701 Peru Av. Benavides No. 1130 Miraflores, Lima 18, Peru (011) 511 700-9200

Make a gift To support Oxfam’s work globally or learn more about a specific program, contact David Kelley at (800) 776-9326 x2431. Or donate online at oxfamamerica.org. Give stocks, bonds, or mutual funds To transfer securities to Oxfam, contact Marie Williams at (800) 776-9326 x2423. Create a legacy To name Oxfam in your estate plan, contact Steven Maughan at (800) 776-9326 x2723. Honor someone with a tribute gift To recognize a loved one, celebrate a birthday or other special occasion, go to oxfamgifts.com for unique gifts that do good. Read, learn, change the world To join Oxfam’s online community and receive important updates, news, and action alerts, sign up today at oxfamamerica.org/join. Join the conversation To stay current with Oxfam’s events and activities, follow us on Facebook (facebook.com/oxfamamerica) and Twitter (twitter.com/oxfamamerica).

Working together to end poverty and injustice | oxfamamerica.org

cvriii


COVER: With containers full of clean water, women make their way back to their shelters in a resettlement camp about 12 miles north of Haiti’s earthquakeravaged capital. Called Corail, the camp sits on a wind-whipped plain and is lined with white tents. Oxfam helped build some of the water and sanitation infrastructure, and though families here have had access to some basic services, the location is isolated, making it difficult for people to find work. Toby Adamson / Oxfam

Working together to end poverty and injustice

WHITE FSC logo/text goes here

This report is printed on paper certified by Green Seal and manufactured entirely with nonpolluting wind energy. Printing was done using soy-based inks at a plant recognized by the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority as a zero-discharge site that recycles all spent materials.

Environmental savings 23 trees preserved

2,132 lbs of net greenhouse gases prevented

9,787 gallons of wastewater flow saved

3,608 lbs of air emissions not generated

1,083 lbs of solid waste not generated

4 barrels of crude oil unused

Š 2011 Oxfam America Inc. All Rights Reserved. Oxfam America is a registered trademark of Oxfam America Inc., and the Oxfam logo is a registered trademark of Stichting Oxfam International. Oxfam America employees are represented by Unite Here, Local 33 (Boston), and Service Employees Interational Union, Local 500 (Washington, DC).


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.